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yconic is the place where you can give and get the help you need for your life as a student. To help keep our community an enjoyable, helpful and safe place for all members, please adhere to the following guidelines.

1. Be nice to people. It's okay to provide constructive criticism, but there is no need to insult other members. For example, "X major is over-saturated right now. You might have trouble finding a job" is fine. "Your major is dumb. Have fun working in fast food," is not helpful nor appropriate.

2. Ask actual questions. If you're looking for help with something, titling a thread "HELP, I DON'T KNOW WHAT TO DO" isn't going to appeal to the members that may be best suited to help you. Be specific and title your post with relevant information.

3. Don't abuse the anonymous feature by pretending to be multiple people. Surprise, surprise, we know who posts what :)

4. Please only tag relevant interests when you create a new thread. Adding unrelated interests is unlikely to get you the help you're looking for and can frustrate other members.

5. Avoid spamming. This includes replying to your own thread for the sole purpose of moving it up the discussion feed.

yconic is the place where you can give and get the help you need for your life as a student. To help keep our community an enjoyable, helpful and safe place for all members, please adhere to the following guidelines.

1. Be nice to people. It's okay to provide constructive criticism, but there is no need to insult other members. For example, "X major is over-saturated right now. You might have trouble finding a job" is fine. "Your major is dumb. Have fun working in fast food," is not helpful nor appropriate.

2. Ask actual questions. If you're looking for help with something, titling a thread "HELP, I DON'T KNOW WHAT TO DO" isn't going to appeal to the members that may be best suited to help you. Be specific and title your post with relevant information.

3. Don't abuse the anonymous feature by pretending to be multiple people. Surprise, surprise, we know who posts what :)

4. Please only tag relevant interests when you create a new thread. Adding unrelated interests is unlikely to get you the help you're looking for and can frustrate other members.

5. Avoid spamming. This includes replying to your own thread for the sole purpose of moving it up the discussion feed.

yconic is the place where you can give and get the help you need for your life as a student. To help keep our community an enjoyable, helpful and safe place for all members, please adhere to the following guidelines.

1. Be nice to people. It's okay to provide constructive criticism, but there is no need to insult other members. For example, "X major is over-saturated right now. You might have trouble finding a job" is fine. "Your major is dumb. Have fun working in fast food," is not helpful nor appropriate.

2. Ask actual questions. If you're looking for help with something, titling a thread "HELP, I DON'T KNOW WHAT TO DO" isn't going to appeal to the members that may be best suited to help you. Be specific and title your post with relevant information.

3. Don't abuse the anonymous feature by pretending to be multiple people. Surprise, surprise, we know who posts what :)

4. Please only tag relevant interests when you create a new thread. Adding unrelated interests is unlikely to get you the help you're looking for and can frustrate other members.

5. Avoid spamming. This includes replying to your own thread for the sole purpose of moving it up the discussion feed.

I really enjoyed Physics 11 and am looking forward to going into Physics 12. I don't think I would be that interested in becoming a university professor though. What other careers in Physics would you recommend? An Astrophysicist has the coolest titleyou gotta admit.

$60,000 sounds nice, but it really shouldn't be about the salary (though it is a part of it). Do you want to become a professor? Do you like teaching others? There's questions that need to be answered. If that's what you want to do, then more power to you.

It takes years and years of studying/research to become a university professor. You'd have to do (at least) your masters, probably your doctors too for whatever field. Then you'd have to publish tons of articles on that subject and do some of your own research. Also most full-time professors at very large universities make more than 60,000 I'm pretty sure..maybe closer to 80,000-100,000 depending on the department and professor I guess.

You can do more then become a prof with a physics degree. Although the degree is aimed at those who want to do research in the field its not unheard of for someone with a physics background to get into engineering.

Physics is awesome! I'd totally (okay, maybe, it sounds cool) go into research for fusion energy or particle accelerators and stuff. I had a really great physics teacher for gr 12 and wow, physics was just soo interesting =) so don't forget about the cool research going on right now such as quantum mechanics and quantum cryptography and entanglement!! Gooo physics!!

Physics is the laws of our universe! I don't see how anyone could deny it being interesting and say that a position in physics research could be boring. If anyones interested in careers in physics just check out the University of waterloo physics site, there a re plenty of great links. Not to mention the Perimeter institute! Now they do some really awsome research and have great job opportunities, as well as positions for grad students :)